Portafogli e Strategie (investimento) Investment Grade, entro le frontiere conosciute.

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a 101,66

Credit ratings​

OMV is rated by Moody’s “A3” and Fitch “A-”

Moody’s „A3“ Senior Unsecured Issuer Rating and Fitch’s “A-“ Issuer Default Rating once more underpin OMV Group’s strong financial position.

Maintaining an investment grade credit rating has been a crucial and strategic objective of OMV. The strong credit profile affirmed by Moody’s and Fitch reflects the successful implementation of OMV’s strategy while keeping a very close eye on financial targets.

The rating itself provides information about the assessment of a company’s credit and financial position and is an important decision-making basis for the evaluation of the solvency especially for the valuation of bonds. The major three international rating agencies that are specialized in monitoring the companies’ financial standing are Fitch, Moody’s and Standard and Poor’s. The rating categories (AAA highest, D lowest) thereby represent a certain default risk.
È’ subordinata
 
Buried deep in the more than 1,000-page tax-and-spending bill that President Donald Trump is muscling through Congress is an obscure tax measure that’s setting off alarms on Wall Street and beyond.
The item — introduced in legislation that passed the House last week as Section 899 and titled “Enforcement of Remedies Against Unfair Foreign Taxes” — calls for, among other things, increasing tax rates for individuals and companies from countries whose tax policies the US deems “discriminatory.” This includes raising tax rates on passive income, such as interest and dividends, earned by investors who are potentially sitting on trillions in American assets.
Cloaked in technicalities, the implication of the “revenge” measure, as it’s quickly becoming known, is clear to analysts: If signed into law, it would further drive away foreign investors at a time when their once ironclad confidence in Treasury bonds and other US assets has already been shaken by Trump’s erratic trade policies and the nation’s deteriorating fiscal accounts.
 
Buried deep in the more than 1,000-page tax-and-spending bill that President Donald Trump is muscling through Congress is an obscure tax measure that’s setting off alarms on Wall Street and beyond.
The item — introduced in legislation that passed the House last week as Section 899 and titled “Enforcement of Remedies Against Unfair Foreign Taxes” — calls for, among other things, increasing tax rates for individuals and companies from countries whose tax policies the US deems “discriminatory.” This includes raising tax rates on passive income, such as interest and dividends, earned by investors who are potentially sitting on trillions in American assets.
Cloaked in technicalities, the implication of the “revenge” measure, as it’s quickly becoming known, is clear to analysts: If signed into law, it would further drive away foreign investors at a time when their once ironclad confidence in Treasury bonds and other US assets has already been shaken by Trump’s erratic trade policies and the nation’s deteriorating fiscal accounts.
Se approvano la legge ed aumentano la tassazione sui titoli US sarà la fine per questi ultimi. Sulle azioni già si beccano 15% ma se aumentano ulteriormente o introducono anche una tassa sulle obbligazioni li vedo veramente male ......
 

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